2015 Portrait/Personality

First Place - 2015 Portrait/Personality
A penitent casts his shadow as he takes part in "Nuestro Senor Atado a la Columna, Maria Santisima de la Paz y San Juan Evangelista" Holy Week procession in Arcos de la Frontera, Spain, Tuesday, March 31, 2015. Hundreds of processions take place throughout Spain during the Easter Holy Week.
Daniel Ochoa de Olza / Associated Press

Second Place - 2015 Portrait/Personality
A migrant and his child look out the window of a train heading to Serbia in Gevgelija, on the Macedonian-Greek border on August 3, 2015.
Dimitar Dilkoff / Agence France-Presse

Third Place - 2015 Portrait/Personality
Fishermen Joe Knapik, right, and John Sanchez. Wilderville, Oregon.
Theo Stroomer

Honorable Mention - 2015 Portrait/Personality
Angelo "Tubby" Galzarano, 79, speaks to a customer on the phone in he repair shop, Tubby's Auto Service, in West Aliquippa, Pa. Aliquippa is one of many old steel towns outside of Pittsburgh, Pa., that has been stuck in the state's Act 47 program for distressed communities for over 20 years since the mills shut down.
Pete Marovich / Corba

Honorable Mention - 2015 Portrait/Personality
(Photo shot with Polaroid Type 55 film, not a Photoshop creation) The day after he turned 100, Harold Shorty Heins hopped out of his wheelchair, ready to tell war stories. And what he saw when the Army sent him to Europe is still so hot it can make him cry today, more than 70 years later. I can't really talk about it, what people went through at the time. People don't know what suffering is. But he also remembers tender moments. Human moments. German soldiers surrendering their guns to him but begging to keep their family photos. Starving children asking him to shoot a rabbit so they could eat.
Francis Gardler / Lincoln Journal Star

Honorable Mention - 2015 Portrait/Personality
Hanifa Nakiryowa, 33, formerly of the Ugandan capital of Kampala and now a Pitt student, lifts her head scarf at Heinz Hall, downtown, Wednesday, June 3, 2015, to reveal the scars she received after being attacked with acid in Uganda in 2011. "I told myself: Crying is not going to help me. I need to think out my next step if this is what I have to deal with the rest of my life.
Andrew Russell / Pittsburgh Tribune-Review